State Representative Mark Lofgren of Muscatine will formally announce tomorrow that he is running against four-term Representative Dave Loebsack in Iowa’s second Congressional district, James Q. Lynch reported today for the Cedar Rapids Gazette. After the jump I’ve posted Lofgren’s official bio and material from the “issues” and “endorsements” pages of his campaign website. Of the seventeen current Iowa House Republicans and four former state representatives who have endorsed Lofgren, four live in Loebsack’s district. Dan Dolan, who lost last year’s GOP primary in IA-02 to John Archer, has also endorsed Lofgren.

As of June 2013, the 24 counties in IA-02 contain 170,130 active registered Democrats, 138,390 Republicans, and 180,950 no-party voters. Loebsack defeated Archer by a comfortable margin in 2012, but in the 2010 midterm election he needed help from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee to fend off a challenge by Mariannette Miller-Meeks, winning by only about 11,000 votes in what was then a more Democratic-leaning district.

Governor Terry Branstad appointed Miller-Meeks to lead the Iowa Department of Public Health in 2011. The GOP challenger to Loebsack in 2008 as well as 2010, Miller-Meeks has attended some Republican Party events this year and confirmed last week that she is still considering a third Congressional bid. Having fallen short in the 2010 Republican wave, Miller-Meeks would likely face an uphill battle persuading GOP primary voters that she deserves another chance to win this district.

Lofgren’s decision leaves Iowa House district 91 open for the 2014 election cycle. This swing district currently contains 6,300 registered Democrats, 6,291 Republicans, and 8,401 no-party voters. A detailed district map is at the bottom of this post. Democrat Nathan Reichert represented the Muscatine area in the Iowa House for three terms, losing to Lofgren in the 2010 wave. Lofgren defeated Democratic challenger John Dabeet last year by 915 votes.

“As a former Speaker Pro Tem of the Iowa House, I am in a position to assess whether lawmakers can truly ‘make a difference.’ Mark Lofgren combines the qualities of conservative leadership, methodical study, and sincere caring. His work ethic is without rival. I have absolutely no doubt that Mark Lofgren will make a great Congressman and advocate for Iowa’s Second District.”

Former Speaker Pro Tem, Jeff Kaufmann

Cedar County Supervisor

Community College Professor

“In all of my years in the Legislature, I have never seen anyone who works as tirelessly as Mark Lofgren does for his constituents. After watching my grandpa serve the people of Iowa, I can strongly predict that Iowa will be a better place with Mark in Congress.”

State Representative Pat Grassley

“Mark Lofgren is a dedicated, competent, articulate lawmaker. He responds to constituent concerns in a timely, effective manner. His peers respected his ability by selecting him to their leadership team. He is a visionary, capable, compassionate legislator. We need Mark Lofgren in the US Congress to bring Midwest values to our nation.”

Sarah Lande, Friend of China’s President Xi JinPing

Current State Representatives

Rob Bacon – Story County

Clel Baudler – Adair County

Mark Brandenburg – Pottawattamie County

Joshua Byrnes – Mitchell County

Jack Drake – Cass County

Greg Forristall – Pottawattamie County

Pat Grassley – Butler County

Lee Hein – Jones County

Megan Hess – Clay County

Jake Highfill – Polk County

Bobby Kaufmann – Cedar County

Jarad Klein – Washington County

John Landon – Polk County

Brian Moore – Jackson County

Walt Rogers – Black Hawk County

Quentin Stanerson – Linn County

Ralph C. Watts – Dallas County

Former State Representatives

Bob Hager – Allamakee County

Lance Horbach – Tama County

Jeff Kaufmann – Cedar County

Dan Petersen – Muscatine County

Other Endorsements

Dan Dolan – Former Candidate for Congress

DeWayne Hopkins – Mayor of Muscatine

Sarah Lande – Friend of China’s President Xi JinPing

Iowa House district 91, which Lofgren is leaving open, covers the city of Muscatine, the small town of Fruitland and some rural areas in eastern Muscatine County.

UPDATE: In the comments, John Deeth speculates that Lofgren’s daughter Emily Lofgren may be poised to run for the Iowa House seat. She managed her father’s 2010 campaign.

“My biggest concern is, you know, basically the finances of the federal government are just a mess,” Lofgren said during an interview with Radio Iowa.

Lofgren graduated from the University of Iowa with a degree in finance and worked in real estate for a decade. He then went into investment sales.

“Basically I’ve started two businesses from scratch and I’ve had Lofgren Investments for, I think, 17 years and I pretty much do retirement investments – that type of planning,” Lofgren said.

Lofgren has been the top Republican on the Iowa House Appropriations Committee and he intends to argue the financial turn-around at the statehouse could be done in D.C.

“Right now we have a $17 trillion national debt…There’s a budget gap of about over a trillion dollars, so that’s my big concern,” Lofgren said. “I guess that’s the area I’m going to focus my efforts on.”

Lofgren will speak at 9 a.m. today in Muscatine before making campaign “announcement” stops in Durant, the Quad Cities, Clinton and Coralville.

Lofgren officially announced his challenge to Dave Loebsack in front of 20 Johnson County Republicans at the Coralville Library on Wednesday. It was a lackluster event.

There were no campaign signs, no sign-in sheets or ballot petitions. Lofgren read his campaign kickoff announcement from a prepared script, only occasionally glancing up at the audience. The well-regarded Republican House representative did not impress many attendees with this appearance.

My favorite curiosity on the [Lofgren] endorsement list […] is “Sarah Lande – Friend of China’s President Xi JinPing.” Sounds too much like the fictional vice president bragging that he was Julia Roberts’ cousin and bonus points if you can name the movie.

Archer

Well it won’t be quite the cakewalk that it was last time for Congressman Loebsack. I expected Archer to do a little bit better than he did, but he just couldn’t connect with many people. You need to find some sort of cause or theme with a campaign and it wasn’t there for Archer. Let the games begin.